MIL-STD-105
MIL-STD-105 was a United States defense standard that provided procedures and tables for sampling by attributes based on Walter A. Shewhart, Harry Romig, and Harold Dodge sampling inspection theories and mathematical formulas. Widely adopted outside of military procurement applications.
The last revision was MIL-STD-105E.[1]
It was officially cancelled in February 1995 by a Notice of Cancellation. This Notice was updated in March 2001 and again in February 2008. The current Notice of Cancellation (Notice 3) recommends that future acquisitions refer to: MIL-STD-1916, "DoD Preferred Methods for Acceptance of Product",[2] or ANSI/ASQ Z1.4, "Sampling Procedures and Tables for Inspection by Attributes".[3]
Version
- Ver.D:Revision in 1963.
- Ver.E:Revision in 1989.
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gollark: But what does `work` really mean?To answer this, we must delve into philoSophy™.
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gollark: By "overcomplicated" I just mean "has piles of special cases and keywords".
See also
- Acceptable quality limit (AQL)
- Acceptance sampling
- Six sigma
References
- MIL-STD-105 official record Archived 2004-10-18 at the Wayback Machine
- "ASSIST: A portal to military and federal specifications and standards". 6 January 2008. Archived from the original on 6 January 2008.
- "The Global Voice of Quality - ASQ". asq.org.
External links
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